Originally posted by: Mo0o
That way you dont take the risk of paying past what you are willing to spend. or is that too logical
Whatever I high-bid, I'm usually not wanting to spend more than that anyway.
Originally posted by: Mo0o
That way you dont take the risk of paying past what you are willing to spend. or is that too logical
Originally posted by: sm8000
I've never known much about it, learned how proxy works or tried it out. I'd be willing to try it sometime down the road. I've had to stop my eBay activities for a while because I need to start hanging onto my money. I'm owed about $1500 in loans to my brother and sister.
Originally posted by: sm8000
Originally posted by: mugs
You were pretty close sm8000, exept that you pay the next highest bid PLUS one bid increment. You don't pay what the next highest bidder bid.
I know, I almost corrected myself in a later post.
tami - Thank you for at least speaking with reason. Your sentence "people cannot have the same bid UNLESS the seller is selling multiple items" - I know about this as I have participated in those types of auctions. When it's a single item, what mugs said below you is correct. And I believe you about first come, first serve.
So, where exactly did I go wrong?
Originally posted by: sm8000
Originally posted by: Mo0o
That way you dont take the risk of paying past what you are willing to spend. or is that too logical
Whatever I high-bid, I'm usually not wanting to spend more than that anyway.
Originally posted by: sm8000
Okay, "outrageously" high was a bit exaggerated. How about "unexpectedly" high (to the other bidders)?
Often, I'm willing to pay a pretty fair price. I hope it doesn't get as high as I bid, but usually I bid only as high as I'm willing to deal with.
